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Countess 1867 – 1930, born Gertrude Ethel Passingham, was a British writer. She married a Japanese nobleman and diplomat, came with him to Japan in 1910 and lived in Kamakura until her death in 1930.The Japan TimesKamakura: Fact and Legend In 1918 she wrote the classic guide Kamakura: Fact and Legend.

She was born in . Her father was the landlord of Count , son of the then Japanese foreign minister , who was studying at , and they fell in love. His father strongly opposed his wedding a foreigner and a commoner. Her family was contrary to the union too. The two didn't give up and, after his father died, when Hirokichi was appointed Consul in , he managed to convince her to join him there. This in spite of the fact they hadn't met in over five years.

Because he was a diplomat, marriage still had to wait, and to stay with him she finally had to pretend to be a child's governess. It was with that role that she first arrived in Japan in 1901. Four years later, the imperial authorization to wed arrived and, after 17 years of courtship and subterfuges, the couple finally married in London in 1905. For reasons of protocol, she took Japanese citizenship and a Japanese name. Her husband suggested 磯, meaning seaside, because she loved the beach so much and because it sounded a little like Ethel.Ian Mutsu After the wedding she followed him around the world, finally returning to Japan with him, never to leave again. She liked the country and successfully adapted to it, even giving English lessons to members of the Imperial Family, among them , brother of Emperor .

She died in 1930 in Kamakura and her funeral was held in a Christian Methodist church. After the Christian ceremony, the Vice Abbot from the great temple took the pulpit, pronounced a eulogy and recited a sūtra for her soul. She is buried in the Mutsu family's yagura in the temple's graveyard in Kamakura, not far from the cenotaphs of great historical figures Hōjō Masako and Minamoto no Sanetomo. Her son Ian Mutsu became a famous newsman and documentary director.


Kamakura: fact and legend
Iso Mutsu was one of the first foreigners in Japan to understand that Kamakura's attraction lies in its extraordinary past and in its temples. She wrote her work after years of research, during which she interviewed temple abbots, high priests and monks. She also consulted Japanese texts, among them the famous , a medieval book that describes in great detail 80 years in the life of the city, and the , a medieval war epic.

The book contains a condensed history of the city of Kamakura and an introduction to over 40 historical locations and temples ranging from to Ofuna. She was swimming in when the Great Kanto earthquake of 1923 struck, and she described the experience in the 1930 edition of her guide. Mutsu's book was republished first in 1930, then in an updated version in 1995 thanks to a grant from the Tokyo Club, and finally in 2006.


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Sources
  • The Japan Times, Sunday, June 25, 2006 issue. A Love Forbidden is Never Forgotten accessed on April 8, 2008
  • Iso Mutsu. Kamakura: Fact and Legend, Tuttle Publishing (1995/06)
  • Ian Nish (Editor). Britain and Japan: Biographical Portraits, Japan Library (1994/06) : Ian Mutsu. The Mutsu Family, pag. 151 and following.

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